I bought this stock in 2011 and have added more from time to time. I now have over 10% gain and would like to be added to the community list. I believe it has the underlying management and power position to outperform for several years.

My foundry stock review contest entry, which was nominated to be one of three finalists. I may get a $100 gift card out of this along with any gains from the stock.

Exelon. For a Chicago-based company valued at 22.9 billion dollars, you'd expect it to be a lot older than fourteen years. But it is. It also happens to be poised to soar in 2014.

I like to buy wide-moat companies with great valuation, but I'm open to growth and tech stocks like Yelp. Exelon is mostly moat/value, but it could really surge in 2014.

Nuclear is getting bigger and bigger as an alternative energy source, even though it's sometimes misunderstood. Nuclear provides 19% of the USA's energy now, and it can only grow higher as the middle ground between low-price coal and high-efficiency solar/wind. And Exelon sits at the top of this as one of the largest nuclear companies in the U.S.A.

No matter how they got here, Exelon has a giant moat. The path to building a reactor takes years of waiting and billions of dollars, meaning Exelon won't have any new competition anytime soon.

And the valuation! Exelon has a P/E of 12, a P/B of 1, a P/S of 0.9, and a P/CF of 3.8: all fantastically low for their industry. And even if it disappoints, you'll still a get a 5% dividend. Sound like a buy?

My position has tripped in this company as the stock price has gone down. It is the largest domestic provider of nuclear generated electricity. Add in it is a holding company for several well positioned utility companies. Additionally, they had the smarts to lower their dividend after their recent merger to facilitate debt reduction.

All of that plays out against the background of the EPS's clean air requirements pertinent to coal fired power generation.

Most everyone on this board has liked Exelon forever, when it was in the 40s, and I suspect even longer. I think now is the time to finally buy it, mostly because it appears to be fairly valued and has lagged the S&P by somewhere around 40% over the last year